It seems that Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 has been making headlines in the mainstream media in recent weeks. And not precisely because of official information, rather because some people claim to have found it. As we already published in MEP, an independent researcher published on social networks an image of an airplane, which appeared to be underwater, off the coast of Padang, Indonesia. The finding was made through a search in Google Maps, and the coordinates, 0 ° 59'56.3 "S 100 ° 19'29.8" E, was one hour away from where the MH370 took off in March 2014.
This caused all kinds of reactions on the Internet, and although some claimed that the images could show the missing aircraft of Malaysia Airlines, many were discredited by the finding that it was just a plane that happened to fly just when the satellite image was taken. But now a video producer claims the reward of 70 million dollars for having found definitively disappeared Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 in the jungle of Cambodia.
An answer to the mystery
Ian Wilson, a British video maker, claims to have discovered the missing Malaysia Airlines flight 370 deep in the jungle of Cambodia thanks to Google Maps (which you can see here). The plane disappeared in 2014 with 239 people on board, but its whereabouts have been shrouded in mystery amid several conspiracy theories to explain what happened.
The pixilated images of Google Maps seem to show the outline of an enormous plane, but it could just be another plane flying under the satellite. Wilson told the British tabloid Daily Star Online that the measures are similar to those of a Boeing 777-200, although there seems to be a mysterious gap between the tail and the main body. Something that for Wilson could be evidence that the plane broke in two parts when landing or crashing into the jungle terrain.
"The Boeing 777-200 has a length of 63.7 meters," Wilson told the Daily Star Online. "When measuring Google's sighting you're looking at about 69 meters, but there seems to be a space between the tail and the back of the plane. It's a bit bigger, but there's a gap that would probably explain that. "